SATURDAY. SE TEMBER 21. 1957 Faubus Orders Troops To Leave High School LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Sept. 30 (W)—Gov. Orval Faubus tonight ordered the National Guard troops away from Central High School a few hours after a Federal Court ordered him to stop interference with the school's integration plan. The guard left at 6:25 p.m. CST. Faced with the injunction Faubus said "I will comply." AF Reveals Major Gain In Defense WASHINGTON, Sept 20 1.4")--I The Air Force today revealed this; country's first major break-I through in efforts to set up a de-; fense against intercontinental bal-I listic missiles. It is a superradar system cap-! able ,of detecting, we:Allying and! figuring the precise course of a weapon speeding through space , 3000 miles away. Gen. Thomas D. White, Air Force chief of staff, disclosed the new development in space war fare and linked it directly to Rus sian claims of having successfully' test-frred a balpstic rocket capable! of reaching any target on earth.l Whit e, declaring Communist! progress in airpower, "does not! neutralize our retaliatory capa-, bility," said the complicated; and radically new radar system' will be operating in the near fu-I tire. The Air Force 'then said it is probable that the first of the 3000- mile-range radars would be in stalled in-Alaska and that north central Canada and either Labra dor or Greenland could serve as locations for two more sets. " Together these could cast an electronic detection screen over the most likely approaches of any space missile from Russia. `Finlandia` Composer Dies . HELSINKI, Sept. 20 UP)—Jean Sibelius, 91, the great, brooding Finnish composer, died tonight from a brain hemorrhage at his secluded woodland home outside Helsinki. An old law in Vermont once required conductors of railway trains to read passages from the Bible to passengers traveling on Sundays. Teamsters to Face Conspiracy Charges WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 (E)—The International Brother-' hood of Teamsters and its officers were ordered today to ap pear in federal court here Sept. 27 to answer charges that they' have conspired to rig the union's election in favor of James R. Hoffa. U. S. Dist. Judge F. Dickinson Letts directed them to show cause why the election scheduled for the Teamsters convention at Miami Beach next month should not be delayed by a temporary in junction. The 82-year-old judge, a for mer R e p u b lican congressman from lowa, acted on a petition filed for a group of rank and file Teamsters in the New York —area by attorney Godfrey P. Schmidt. Schmidt, former counsel for the New York State Labor De partment, successfully staved off Hoffa's attempt to swing a New York Teamsters Council election two years ago. In his court appearance today. Schmidt claimed Hoffa—Midwest Team s.t er s vice president and _ leading contender for the $50,000- a-year presidential post being re linquished by Dave Beck has combined with Beck and others to rig the Miami Beach balloting. He said the convention dele gates have been handpicked, se lected without the membership vote_ required by the Teamsters constitution. -He alleged this was typical of the Teamsters' practice of depriving rank and file mem . 1)&5 of a voice in either conven tions or local union affairs. I Presumably the nine Negro stu-! Icients who have been barred from , the school by the troops since they' attempted to enter Sept. 4, will 'attend classes Monday. Several !had said they would go if guards men would not bar their way. The action of the governor ap parently closes one chapter of the, historic struggle between state and federal power, but Faubus said he' !would'exhaust.all avenues of ap peal to overturn the injunction. Faubus spelled out his stand on la three-station television hookup in Little Rock five minutes after: ILt Col. Marion Johnson had ap peared at the high school and called out the guard. Action Climaxes Events It was a dramatic - climax to a l swift-moving chain of events which started with Federal Judge; Ronald N. Davies' injunction : ,agatnst Faubus following a five-I hour hearing during which the; governor's attorneys walked out saying "We're through." - They had challenged the federal , l government's right to question !Faubus' actions and then left. The. !hearing continued and at the end the judge ruled that Faubus had thwarted the order of the court' for integration by his use of the troops and directed him so-stop. Faubus in his speech said Judge Davies "ignored the law" in re fusing some of the motions made by the governor's attorneys today. Faubus Instructs Lawyers He said, "I have instructed my attorneys to exhaust every legal remedy.to appeal this order. How ever, so long as this order is in effect and until its certain rever sal on appeal, I will comply . . ." The governor then said even as he talked the ) guards were leav- NEWPORT, R. 1., Sept. 20 OP)— Although obviously elated, Presi dent Eisenhower's headquarters tonight declined comment on the order of Arkansas Gow. Orval Fau b u s withdrawing National Guard troops from Central High School, Little Rock. "There will be no comment to night," Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Gov. McKeldin Offers Support To Integration ' DEALE. Md . Sept. 20 (.-Pl—A ,county official today accused Gov. Theodore R. McKeldin of "frying to stir something up" with his promise of state police support if a 6-year-old Negro boy . would re-enroll in a white school. "Everything is calm if Mr. Mc- Keldin will just keep his mouth shut," said Mrs. Pauline W. Re tmey, who represent; the 7th Dis `trict on the board of Anne Arun del County commissioners. "I've known these watermen all my life. and they're not going to take it," she continued. "Gov. Mc- YKeldin can issue all the edicts he wants to, and they can send state and county police, but they'll haVe Ito stay here 24 hours a day." Mrs. Remey indicated she :t h o u g h t McKeldin's statement ,yesterday might have had some ithing to do with a cross being ;burned in front of the office of ;Dr.. Harry N. Jones last night. Dr. Jones, a Negro. and the ,only resident physician in this fishing community 20 mil.es south of Annapolis. took his son out of ;school Wednesday after threaten 'ing phone calls. 'Thor' Trial Seen Ist' Successful Test MISSILE TEST CENTER. Cape Caaveral, Fla., Sept. 20 (A') A huge, flame-trailing missile was launched from here today in what was believed to be the first suc cessful firing of the Air Force Thor. Authorities confirmed only that a missile had been fired—the third in two days—but their tone indicated they were satisfied with the performance. The projectile rose with a-flam ing tail, traveling upward on an even keel for perhaps 15 or 20 miles before turning in a more horizontal direction. A trail of vapor followed it far out over the Atlantic. Observers three miles away heard the sound 20 or 30 seconds after the missile was airborne at 9:25 a.m. It came as a heavy roar like the sound of bombers flying overhead. Windows rattled in downtown Cocoa 15 miles away "This is the best propaganda I've found yet for dining out!" Just give your man a chance to see How boring dishwashing can be! Ist Flu Death Cited •The State of Missouri FridayfUnited States have suffered Asian reported what it termed the first flu_ confirmed death from Asian fluff Dr. H. M. Hards.vicite of the in this country, according to thelMissouri Health Division did not Associated Press. identify the man believed the first Reports of new outbreaks in the United States and Canada con- tinued to pile up. And in Puerto Rico the health department said there were possibly 129,000 new cases during the week which end ed Sept. 14. The Public Health Service in Washington estimated that about 100,000 persons in the continental THE MIXTURE AS BEFORE Mday begins my fourth year of writing this column and, as before, I will continue to explore the issues that grip the keen young mind of campus America—bunting questions like "Should hou s emothers be forced to retire at 28?" and "Should pajamas and robes be allowed at first-hour classes?" and "Should proctors be armed?" and "Should picnicking be permitted in the stacks?" and "Should teachers above the rank of associate professor be empowered to perform marriages?" and "Should cap ital punishment for pledges be abolished?" Philip Morris Incorporated sponsors this column. Philip Morris Incorporated makes Philip Morris ciga rettes. They also make Marlboro cigarettes. Marlboro is what I am going to talk to you about this year. Before beginning the current series of columns, I made an exhaustive study of Marlboro advertising. This took almost four minutes. The Marlboro people don't waste words. They give it to you fast: "You get a lot to like in a Marlboro ... Filter ... Flavor ... Flip-top Box." Well, sir, at first this approach seemed to me a little terse, a bit. naked. Perhaps, thought I, I should drape it with a veil of violet prose, adorn it with a mantle of fluffy adjectives, dangle some participles from the ears . But then I thought, what for? Doesn't that tell the whole Marlboro story? ... Filter ... Flavor ... Flip-top Box. Marlboro tastes great. The filter works. So does the box. What else do you need to know? So, with the Marlboro story quickly told, lit us turn immediately to the chief problem of undergraduate life— the money problem. This has always been a vexing dilemma, even in my own college days. I recall, for example, a classmate named Oliver Hazard Sigafoos, a great strapping fellow standing 14 hands high, who fell in love with a beautiful Theta named Nikki Spillane, with hair like beaten gold and eyeballs like two table spoons of forgetfulness. Every night Oliver Hazard would take Nikki out to dine and dance, and then to dine again, for dancing made :Nikki ravenous. Then they would go riding in the swan boats, and then Nikld, her appetite sharpened by the sea air, would have 8 or JO cutlets, and then Oliver Hazard would take her home, stopping on the way to buy her a pail of oysters or two. . To raise money for these enchanted evenings. Oliver Hazard took on a number of part-time jobs. Between classes he cut hair. After school he gutted perches. From dusk to midnight he.vulcanized medicine balls. From midnight to dawn he trapped night era.wlers. - This crowded Schedule took, alas, a heavy toll from Oliver Hazard. In the space of a month he dwindled from 260 to 104 pounds—but that, curiously enough, proved his salvation. Today Oliver Hazard is a jockey, earning a handsome liv:Dg which, combined with what he makes as a lymph donor after hours ; is quite sufficient to curb Nikki's girlish appetite. Today they are married and live in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, with their two daughters, Filter and Flavor, and their son, Flip-top Box. e 31ai 71.ulaan. 1957 The makers of Marlboro take pleasure in bringing you this free-wheeling, uncensored column - every week during the school year ... And speaking of pleasure, hare you tried a Marlboro? confirmed fatality. The University of Colorado pre- pared to open on schedule Mon day although about'soo students became ill during fraternity and sorority rush week. The spread of a respiratory infection appeared to have slowed and :aboratory tests are being made to deter mine if the virus is Asian flu. On Noire mAL (.toti or of "fia:Pfo,it 1309 With ('heek," c.,...) 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers